Child’s solitary confinement case goes to the Court of Appeal

By agency reporter

November 7, 2018

The Court of Appeal is to determine whether or not keeping a child in conditions of solitary confinement amounts to inhuman and degrading treatment.

The hearing, which will begin on 7 November 2018 and is listed for two days, concerns a boy who was routinely locked alone in his cell in Feltham prison, in west London, for 23 hours a day. This continued for 55 days, during which he received no education.

The boy, identified in court documents as AB, is represented by the legal team of the Howard League for Penal Reform.

In July 2017, the High Court ruled that the boy’s treatment was unlawful because it was against prison rules.

But the High Court stopped short of accepting that keeping him in isolation for more than 22 hours a day was degrading and inhuman treatment. This part of the ruling will now be considered by the Court of Appeal.

The case will be heard at a time of growing concern about the use of solitary confinement, with medical professionals and children’s rights experts calling for change.

In April 2018, the British Medical Association, the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health issued a joint position statement calling for the solitary confinement of children and young people to be abolished and prohibited.

The three medical bodies said: “In light of its potential to cause harm, and in the absence of compelling evidence for its use, we call for an end to the use of solitary confinement on children and young people detained in the youth justice system.”

The Joint Committee on Human Rights has begun an inquiry into solitary confinement and restraint of children in secure settings.

A statement on the UK Parliament website, outlining the scope of the inquiry, reads: “Serious concerns have been raised about the conditions and treatment of children in detention. These include the use of restraint, which still includes techniques which involve deliberately inflicting pain, and solitary confinement, which can increase risk of self-harm and long term developmental and psychiatric problems.”

Last month, a report by the Children’s Commissioner for England, Anne Longfield, raised serious concerns about the use of segregation and isolation of children in secure penal settings.

The UK is out of step with a growing international consensus that children should never be placed in solitary confinement.

In the US, the District Court for New York granted an injunction requiring the immediate cessation of 23-hour solitary confinement of children. The court referred to expert evidence that “solitary confinement perpetuates, worsens, or even in some cases precipitates mental health concerns that can lead to long-term and often permanent changes in adolescent brain development”.

In April 2017, a report by the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture stated that children in Cookham Wood prison, in Kent, were “regularly held in conditions akin to solitary confinement for periods of 30 days and some for as long as 60 days or even, on occasion, up to 80 days for reasons of discipline and good order”.

In a ruling delivered in 2015, the Supreme Court held that there are “well known” risks of solitary confinement and that prolonged solitary confinement – defined as being held in solitary confinement for longer than 15 days – is particularly harmful.

The Supreme Court cited expert evidence that the prolonged solitary confinement of adults can have an “extremely damaging effect on … mental, somatic and social health” and “some of the harmful psychological effects of isolation can become irreversible”.

* Download the joint position statement published by the British Medical Association, the Royal College of Psychiatrists and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, which calls for the solitary confinement of children and young people to be abolished and prohibited here

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